Friday, September 28, 2012

Missions and Evangelism


Throughout the week, a few Missions Projects took place throughout the city of New Orleans. Rev. Dwayne Golightly, General Secretary of the Department on Evangelism and Missions, as a component of his Summit class, “Teaching the Mission of the CME Church”, small groups of people took cars to bring food to persons who were in need. Leaving around lunchtime every day, these conference participants went to minister to the church congregation out in the New Orleans community.

The Young Adults also collected school supplies and monies for a project entitled, “Issac’s Closet”, to benefit the J D Meisler Middle School in New Orleans, LA. Coordinated by Armisha Walker-Harrison, Advisor to the Connectional Young Adult Ministry, Meisler students, many of whom lost their belongings in Hurricane Issac received over $2500 in supplies.

See pictures below of Missions in action.



Friday Morning Bible Study


“Getting Ready to Close, but I’m trying to find a place to land”

On Friday, September 28, 2012, Bishop James Walker concluded his bible study by focusing on the Temple and David’s relationship to it.  In addition to the Bible Study hand out from Thursday, these notes will give a full recounting of the class.

Chronicler is telling the importance of the land for the Temple. This is the first time it is mentioned about having a full-time priesthood.  The Levites were those who established the designated full ministry rolls in service.  The Chronicler has a consciousness of who God is and offers that we must be in some kind of intimate worship with God.  The Chronicler comes to us with an understanding of who God is – that God is a Holy God.  You need to have some clean hands  - we need to be a consecrated person in order to work with the Lord. 

You need those who can be ready to serve.  When Hezekiah came to Solomon’s Temple where there was over 200+ billion dollars, he finds a temple where the doors won’t even open.   In having full time and fully dedicated people, need to be sanctified, dedicated, and engaged, someone ought to be ready for full time service.

David established the Zadicite priesthood.  Establishes the Levites. David is more than a King.  Psychically and physically present. The ark is a very spiritual thing. The promises of King David were lived out in his generations.    It is an intentional teaching lesson for Israel to see a more complete picture of David.  If we only focus on the Psalms and other books, we do not have a full understanding of David.  Chronicles offers this. 

David must be much more than a King – David is both a Priest and a King.  He is a Temple planter.  David is a man of worship – a liturgical dancer, a prophet of the oracles of God, the Bishop of the Levites, organizes all the preachers of the day.  It is important that Israel understands David in the full contextual role. If you really know David, he was as much invested in the temple as he was into the Kingship.   If you really care about David, look to his communion with God.  Even though the throne is gone, the temple is still around – which means the spiritual is more important.

There is a distinct correlation to the New Testament – If it’s only about Kingship, then what does it look like today?  Jesus is the son of David. He is setting up a hope in God based on the link to the past. Here there is intentional Ideology – even though we have no Kingship, as long as we have a temple, we are God.  The presence of the temple validates David and the importance of the temple in spirituality.  It becomes a Legacy of Hope – how Jesus could become a son of David.

Scholars consider the Priest of David – or David as a priest.  We only see the David of worship in the Psalms.  Scholars raise the question of where does the image of David goes beyond the praiser. What is the identity of this King of Glory?  The Chronicler answered this in Samuel and Kings.  Nobody is sure of his identity, but he does a good job in allowing David to be a great king, the ideal warrior and the priest of praise.  The Chronicles shows worship that is exciting and life giving.  Worship with all your might.  Worshiping God with your whole heart – let the whole nation shout before the Lord.  The full-time priesthood includes but is not limited to, blessing food, clothing the naked and healing the sick.

Prayer of Jabez is a temptation to preach, but what the Chronicler finds compelling is not Jabez.  It’s not the man who requested it, but the God who answered it. Jabez was a common man who prayed, but the Lord answers his prayers.  When you talk to God, God will show up and God will show out.

Similarly in 2 Chronicles 33:10-20, Menassah prays to God.  God didn’t take him to the graveyard but the backyard.  He figured out God in the middle of a jail cell praying in a dungeon when he belonged. He wombed himself.  The Lord also heard an evil King who was somebody.

The full and complete Bible Study is available for purchase via CMETv.

Women's Missionary Council



September 24-29, 2012, the Women’s Missionary Council of the Christian Methodist Episcopal (CME) Church held their annual meeting as apart of the CME Unity Summit in New Orleans, Louisiana.  In a beautiful ballroom with window overlooking the Mississippi Riverbend, the ladies of blue and white attended to their business of reports from the various Boards.  Exploring the theme of "Reach...Teach...Train...Send", the delegates recognized the progress of their support of schools in South Africa and Haiti, and presented on various subjects including “Dancing with Him” by Sis. Connie Jenkins of Porter St. Paul CME Church in Northport, Alabama, relating dance to the private nature of our relationship with God.



Missionary President Princess Pegues presided over the
Women's Missionary Council Meeting during the Unity Summit.

One of their duties included recognizing the presence of the Host Bishop and the first lady by honoring them with custom embroidered stolls.




Thursday, September 27, 2012

Missionary Lunch "Here am I, Lord": Celebrating Women Touching the World

On Thursday, September 27, 2012, the Women's Missionary Society hosted their Annual Luncheon at the 1st CME Unity Summit in New Orleans, Louisana.  The highlights of the program included Dr. Louise Brown's recounting the history of past Missionary Presidents, the Women's Missionary Choir, raising $10,000 for Miles College and an address by Mrs. Cynthia M A Butler-McIntyre, National President of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc as the guest speaker.

Mrs. Butler-McIntyre's message from John 2:1-5 looked at the lessons one could learn from Jesus at the wedding of Cana.  Under the title of "Just Do It", Butler-McIntyre point out that to receive from God you must: 1) Ask for it - we are "Heirs of Salvation" so ask in the name of Jesus for it to work; 2) Wait for an Answer - until we have a divine instructions; 3) Act on it - don't be disobedient, for it scars.

See some of the pictures below:

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Bible Study



Bishop James Walker presented the second part of the Bible Study for the CME Unity Summit on Wednesday, September 27, 2012 @ 8:00am on the Book of Chronicles. This morning, the specific focus was on King David.  Below are notes that supplement the Bible Study worksheet passed out during the session:

 - We are Euros, we are Westerns – a west orientation to things.  Most of the world is not.  Genealogy is important to everyone else.  It is a value  - think of African griots.  Faith Comes by Hearing - The Faith project – translating the Bible for every one.  John 3:16 is important to us, but others are interested in Luke 3:16 – the genealolgy. They like to see how Jesus is hooked up – who he is, not just what he said.  Started asking about fact because it didn’t seem to match, but they didn’t realized that we are asking the wrong questions.  We can not interpret it through our own eyes.

- We expand and contract the genealogy – contract since family will have children outside of marriage; it will be expanded when those secrets come out.
Consider the Kennites – the Africans connected to Jethro (included because they traveled with them). Based on the Kennite hypothesis – that Jethro helped Moses to see God.

- This morning, we're discussing the David of the Chronicles.   It is the Primary source about David.  Outside of the Bible, it’s like he never lived. Only in the Jewish literary tradition.
Joseph Telushkin discusses this in the Jewish literacy tradition.  David is described more familiarly than any other person.

- David He is presented as the youngest of Jesse’s.  Why does Jesse not even present the 8th son?  Because he was the youngest.  This was a winner take the inheritance society.  The oldest takes it all; if he was the youngest of three, it would make a different.  David lives on the “Southside of Chicago” – lives in a time of Philistines, Giants and Israel.  He had no hopes of getting an inheritance.  He was born under challenging circumstances. 

The first words you hear out of the mouth of David is, "Tell me again, what happens to the brother who kills Goliath?" Not a shock because David stands to inherit nothing.  God uses the circumstances – the disadvantage to become an advantage for the rest of his life.  “If you are born with a disadvantage, it can be turned to an advantage for the rest of your life.  For there is nothing impossible for God.”

David understood that as a shephard he had to have many different professions:
  •        was a singer (got a gig with the King – Luther Vandross of is time; made rhymn)
  •        was a fighter (Muhammad Ali) was an expert as using the slingshot. (Goliath was a meal ticket, inheritance, can marry up – had nothing to lose; was winning battles against lions and bears)
  •         Gang banger (not doing drugs, but they work with the whomever will take care of them) 1 Chronicles 11:10 - 47 - the mighty Men of David.  oOe of David’s boys, Joshabeam, killed 300 men by himself. Others were just as "accomplished".  They sang a song in 1 Samuel 18:7 comparing Saul and David.   If you were coming to fight David, do not bring your lunch.

David does not have the good fortune of going to seminary.  But God has given him gifts and graces.  David feels he has to be loyal to the royal in him.  “How can I bring out of me, what God has put in me?”  The Pasture should your University, your college, so that when you get a Goliath opportunity, your slingshot will be ready. It’s what we do for ourselves. 

This is the man that God uses in a special way.   Even though David has the might, God has the design.  God was watching over David while he was in the pasture.  Not one step of your life was not ordered by God.  God placed you here by Divine providence.  Sometimes he reverted back to what he knew.
Led one kind of life, but was given a second chance.  Doesn’t go into the negativity.

Seven last words of David (see handout) 

Where 1 Kings 4 paints a negative picture, Chronicles shows David’s interests in building a temple. God holds David back on a technicality – David was a man of war. God wouldn’t let him build the temple.  If I can’t be on the board, let me help the board.  Setting up the stage for the temple. Provide over 600 lbs of gold.  Chronicles shows how he moves from being King David to being Rev. Dr. David.





Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Installation of Bishop Sylvester Williams, Sr.

The Installation of Bishop Sylvester Williams, Sr. as Chair of the College of Bishops of the Christian Methodist Episcopal Church took place at the Annual CME Unity Summit on Wednesday, September 26, 2012 following the Connectional Board Meeting.  Senior Bishop Thomas L. Hoyt, Sr, served as the liturgist.

The participants sang the hymn, "My Hope is Built", and the Affirmation of Faith was lead by Bishop Ronald M. Cunningham.  The prayer was offered by Bishop James B. Walker and the Scripture, Romans 8:31-39, was read by Bishop Godwin T. Umoette.  Special presentations were then presented by Presiding Elder Delmetria Cayson-Combs and members from the 2nd Episcopal District regional auxilaries.  Mrs. Sharon McDuffie, with help from a sample of the CYAM Choir, sang "Encourage Yourself" (see video below) followed by The Charge and Investiture was given by Senior Bishop Hoyt, who has chaired the committee twice.  He offered Bishop Williams, "I charge you to seek to be faithful, seek to be fruitful, seek to have a shepherd's heart, and seek to hear to recognize everyone as equal and that everyone has a comment to make."

The Prayer of Induction was made by Bishop Teresa E. Snorton, after which Bishop Williams accepted his selection as the Chair of the College of Bishops with sermonic reflections on Numbers 13:30-33, offering "A Message of Encouragement".  He offered three points: 1) Stop thinking about how small you are; understand what God can do with the little; 2) When you're about to get discouraged, you should look at who you're listening to; and 3) When you find yourself getting discouraged, look back at how far you come.

Bishop Marshall Gilmore prayed The Prayer for the Church and after the Hymn "O Rapturous Scenes", Bishop Othal H. Lakey pronounced the Benediction.





Quotable Quotes

"When we stop learning, we stop teaching." Elder Jane Thomas, Dialogue between Ministers and Lay